/num2words

Modules to convert numbers to words. 42 --> forty-two

Primary LanguagePythonOtherNOASSERTION

num2words - Convert numbers to words in multiple languages

num2words is a library that converts numbers like 42 to words like forty-two. It supports multiple languages (English, French, Spanish, German and Lithuanian) and can even generate ordinal numbers like forty-second (altough this last feature is a bit buggy at the moment).

The project is hosted on https://github.com/savoirfairelinux/num2words

Installation

The easiest way to install num2words is to use pip:

pip install num2words

Otherwise, you can download the source package and then execute:

python setup.py install

The test suite in this library new, so it's rather thin, but it can be ran with:

python setup.py test

Usage

There's only one function to use:

>>> from num2words import num2words
>>> num2words(42)
forty-two
>>> num2words(42, ordinal=True)
forty-second
>>> num2words(42, lang='fr')
quarante-deux

Besides the numerical argument, there's two optional arguments.

ordinal: A boolean flag indicating to return an ordinal number instead of a cardinal one.

lang: The language in which to convert the number. Supported values are:

  • en (English, default)
  • fr (French)
  • de (German)
  • es (Spanish)
  • lt (Lithuanian)
  • lv (Latvian)
  • en_GB (British English)
  • en_IN (Indian English)
  • no (Norwegian)
  • pl (Polish)
  • ru (Russian)
  • dk (Danish)
  • pt_BR (Brazilian Portuguese)
  • he (Hebrew)

You can supply values like fr_FR, the code will be correctly interpreted. If you supply an unsupported language, NotImplementedError is raised. Therefore, if you want to call num2words with a fallback, you can do:

try:
    return num2words(42, lang=mylang)
except NotImplementedError:
    return num2words(42, lang='en')

History

num2words is based on an old library, pynum2word created by Taro Ogawa in 2003. Unfortunately, the library stopped being maintained and the author can't be reached. There was another developer, Marius Grigaitis, who in 2011 added Lithuanian support, but didn't take over maintenance of the project.

I am thus basing myself on Marius Grigaitis' improvements and re-publishing pynum2word as num2words.

Virgil Dupras, Savoir-faire Linux